Embodying the Sacred:
Temporal Changes in the Cosmological Function of Art and
Symbolism in the Mississippian Period, AD 1250-1400
HONORS THESIS
Presented to the Honors Committee of
Texas State University-San Marcos
In Partial Fulfillment of
the Requirements
For Graduation in the University Honors Program
By
Spencer C. LeDoux
San Marcos, Texas
May 2009
Embodying the Sacred:
Temporal Changes in the Cosmological Function of Art and
Symbolism in the Mississippian Period, AD 1250-1400
Approved:
____________________________
Dr. Heather C. Galloway
Director, University Honors Program
Approved:
____________________________
Dr. F. Kent Reilly, III
Department of Anthropology
Supervising Professor
____________________________
Dr. Adam King
South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology
Second Reader
iv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
One of the most important lessons I gained with the writing of this thesis is that,
unlike most other undergraduate coursework, a thesis cannot be written alone.
Throughout my research, several individuals were integral in motivating me to both test
my limits and be successful academically.
I first want to thank the University Honors Program at Texas State University-San
Marcos. They have provided me with a wonderful place to study, advice on my future,
and innumerable cups of coffee. I specifically want to thank both Dr. Heather Galloway
and Diann McCabe for their support and advice. My plans for graduate school were
largely shaped by their support.
I next want to thank several individuals in the Department of Anthropology.
Johann Sawyer provided many hours of stimulating debate for which I am grateful. He
constantly questioned my assumptions and forced me several times to reevaluate my
ideas. Dr. Britt Bousman has been integral in helping me develop the practical skills
necessary to practice Archaeology. He has also provided me with much needed balance
as I explored the different theoretical frameworks within Archaeology. My deepest and
sincerest thanks and gratitude go to my supervisor, Dr. F. Kent Reilly, III. Under his
supervision, I was introduced to a topic I never dreamed existed. He has provided me
with advice, input, and ideas for this thesis. He has challenged me to be a better writer
and a more successful student. As I learned from Dr. Reilly, I was given the opportunity
to work at his conferences and meet other professors in this field. I owe you a debt of
v
gratitude for showing me the path, Dr. Reilly. I also want to thank Dr. Adam King at the
University of South Carolina. Thank you for the several phone conversations and emails
that made this thesis possible.
Finally, I want to thank the one person whose unflagging support has enabled me
to pursue my dreams. My wife, Amber, has suffered countless hours of proof-reading,
babysitting, and alone time as I researched and wrote this thesis. She provided this
unquestioning support, even though she realized that this thesis was merely the first of
many long steps on my road through graduate school. Amber, thank you so much for
your love and encouragement. I could not do this without you.
This manuscript was submitted to the University Honors Program on May 5, 2009.
Spencer C. LeDoux
vi
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................ iv
LIST OF TABLES ...................................................................................................... viii
LIST OF FIGURES ........................................................................................................ ix
CHAPTERS
I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 1
II. THEORY AND METHOD .............................................................................. 6
Archaeological Theory ............................................................................. 7
Iconography in the SECC ....................................................................... 14
Methodology .......................................................................................... 20
III. THE ETOWAH SITE .................................................................................. 22
Site Geography ....................................................................................... 23
Excavations at Etowah ............................................................................ 26
The Elite Status of Mound C................................................................... 28
Etowah, the Cult-Bringer, and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex .... 29
Elite Artifacts at Etowah ......................................................................... 32
Warfare in the Late Wilbanks Phase ....................................................... 33
Iconographic Evidence for Warfare ........................................................ 35
Conclusion ............................................................................................. 39
IV. The Lake Jackson Site .................................................................................. 41
The Fort Walton Culture ......................................................................... 43
The Lake Jackson Site Geography .......................................................... 46
History of Excavations ........................................................................... 48
Mound 3 and Its Burials ......................................................................... 50
Division of Burials ................................................................................. 54
Analysis ................................................................................................. 57
vii
Conclusion ............................................................................................. 60
V. Comparisons and Conclusions ....................................................................... 62
BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................... 69
APPENDIX A ............................................................................................................... 74
APPENDIX B ............................................................................................................... 78
viii
LIST OF TABLES
TABLE 3-1 Etowah Site Occupational Sequence ........................................................... 25
TABLE 3-2 Artifact Patterning across the Wilbanks Phase ............................................ 38
TABLE 4-1 Lake Jackson Site Occupation Chronology ................................................. 46
TABLE 4-2 Mound 3 Floor Depths ............................................................................... 51
TABLE 5-1 Site and Mound Chronology for Etowah and Lake Jackson ........................ 63
ix
LIST OF FIGURES
FIGURE 1-1 Map of the extent of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex and its
major centers. ....................................................................................................... 2
FIGURE 2-1 This is a map of the proposed Prestige Goods Network that flowed
between Lake Jackson, Etowah, and other Mississippian ceremonial centers ...... 12
FIGURE 1-2: On the left is a Hightower anthropomorphic style gorget. ........................ 14
FIGURE 2-3: ―Outina’s Order of March‖ by Theodore DeBry. Note the copper
breastplates worn by the three individuals .......................................................... 17
FIGURE 2-4: This is the Rogan plate #2. ...................................................................... 20
FIGURE 3-1: The Wilbanks phase Etowah site (circa AD1375) at its greatest known
extent of mound construction ............................................................................. 23
FIGURE 3-2: This is the Rogan plate #1 that was recovered at Etowah ........................ 26
FIGURE 2-3: Burial map showing a hypothetical overlay of the Rogan, Moorehead,
and Larson excavations ...................................................................................... 28
FIGURE 3-4: Construction stages of Mound C ............................................................. 29
FIGURE 3-5: This image shows the three different systems used to make excavation
maps. Rogan’s map dates to the 1890s, Moorehead’s Map to the 1920s, and
Larson’s map to the 1950s .................................................................................. 31
FIGURE 4-1: This is the general layout of the Lake Jackson Florida site at its
greatest known extent, circa AD 1400 ................................................................ 42
FIGURE 4-2: Map showing location of farmsteads and mound centers in the Lake
Jackson polity .................................................................................................... 47
FIGURE 4-3: This map shows the locations of Griffins excavations in 1947 ................ 48
FIGURE 4-4: These are two of the copper plates found at Lake Jackson. ...................... 53
FIGURE 4-5: This map shows the location of most of the 23 burials recovered from
Mound 3 ............................................................................................................ 55
1
Chapter 1: Introduction
The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (SECC) is a shared corpus of similar
artistic motifs that are found throughout the southeastern part of the United States and
date from A.D. 900 to A.D. 1731 (see Fig 1-1). The complex was first identified in a
paper by Antonio J. Waring and Preston Holder in 1945 (Waring & Holder 1977). At the
time, SECC artifacts and artwork were believed to revolve around the three primary ritual
centers of Spiro, OK; Moundville, AL; and Etowah, GA. While these centers remain the
preeminent locales for SECC art and iconography, sub-centers have been identified in
Tennessee, Florida, Arkansas, and Texas. Roughly defined, the SECC extends from
Oklahoma to Florida and from the Gulf to the Great Lakes (King 2007).
Waring and Holder (1977) used four criteria to define the SECC: shared artistic
motifs, God-Animal representations, ceremonial objects, and costume (now properly
referred to as regalia). The artifact assemblages at Spiro, Moundville, and Etowah
displayed similarities in these four categories. Warring and Holder concluded,
2
There existed in the prehistoric Southeast a highly-
developed cult or cult complex, integrated with and
fundamentally dependent upon a horticultural base…This
integration probably took place in the Middle Mississippi
Basin.…Local variations in the complex are explicable in
terms of the previous ceremonial life and basic economics
of the subareas under consideration (Waring and Holder
1977: 29).
While continued archaeological research has revealed the complexity of the SECC as it
Figure 3-1: Map of the extent of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex and its major centers. (after
Howard 1968:viii).
3
was manifested by different cultural groups, Waring & Holder’s basic findings have
stood for close to seventy years.
The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex first arose in Cahokia, IL circa AD 900,
although its origins have been tentatively traced back to the Havana Hopewell culture in
eastern Illinois (Reilly & Garber 2007). The Cahokia site is located near East St. Louis,
Illinois and covers almost 16 km along the Mississippi river. After two hundred years of
occupation, Cahokia was abandoned. The collapse of Cahokia was followed by a
diaspora of cult belief that spread throughout the Southeast and was symbolized in sacred
copper plates. About the same time, the ceremonial centers of Moundville, AL and
Etowah, GA arose (Knight 1997; Hall 2004). At both of these sites, copper plates were
recovered that were made in the Cahokia art style known as the Late Braden (Brown
2007b).
My research for this paper focuses on the ceremonial centers of Etowah, Georgia
and Lake Jackson, Florida. The Etowah site is located on the Etowah River in the
northwestern corner of the state of Georgia near the town of Cartersville. Etowah is still
considered one of the most important ceremonial hubs in the SECC. Research at the site
has been extensive and has provided some of the best chronological controls in
Mississippian Period archaeology (King 2003). On the other hand, the Lake Jackson site
is located on the southeastern periphery of the SECC. The Lake Jackson site was an
important regional ceremonial center that later became the capital of the Apalachee tribe
(Scarry 1984; Payne 1994), but it is small in scale and scope when compared to Etowah.
Etowah and Lake Jackson shared a trade relationship that involved goods
restricted to elite usage (King 2003). This paper will analyze the burial assemblages
4
from the elite burials in Mound C at Etowah and Mound 3 at Lake Jackson. I will
attempt to look at artifact patterns as a function of time and trade at both sites. A
comparison of the data between the two sites will help clarify our understanding of the
relationship between these two chiefdoms.
In Chapter 2, I will outline the theory and methods that establish the framework
for my research. I will focus both on general archaeological theory such as mortuary
analysis and theories that pertain to the study and interpretation of the SECC. I will also
go into detail on the method of iconographic interpretation.
In Chapter 3, I will discuss the Etowah site. I will summarize the history of
excavations performed on Mound C. I will then look at the artifact assemblage recovered
from its roughly 400 burials. Using the data that is collated in the Brain & Phillips
catalogue (1996), I will chart the artifacts according to the more recent dates provided by
Adam King (2007). I will show how a distinctive iconographic shift occurred at the
division between the Early and Late Wilbanks phases (circa AD 1325) and relate this
change to an increase in warfare.
Chapter 4 will focus on the Lake Jackson site. Similar to Chapter 3, I will
summarize the history of excavations at the site. I will also describe the mortuary
assemblage from Mound 3 at Lake Jackson. Although there is much less data from the
Lake Jackson site, I will perform a similar analysis of the burial assemblage over time.
By realigning the burial phases described by Jones (1991) to the stratigraphy of the
mound, I will show that Lake Jackson adopted a new ideology as its relationship with
Etowah expanded. This shift is marked by a change in the burial assemblage that I
believe is also related to the Etowah site.
5
Chapter 5 will conclude this paper by summarizing a few of the similarities and
differences between Etowah and Lake Jackson. I will explore how elites displayed their
power, how they buried their dead, and how the differences between a periphery and
centralized location affected the two cultures.
Most of my research is based on charts of the data from each burial assemblage. I
have included these charts in Appendices A and B in order to aid the reader in
understanding and seeing the iconographic shifts. I also want to note at the outset that
my research relies exclusively on the work and excavations done by others. By
reexamining previous data and findings I hope to expand our knowledge of the
relationship that Etowah and Lake Jackson shared. I do not intend in any way to overturn
earlier researchers’ conclusions; instead I hope to use my research to build upon the
foundations that they have laid.
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Chapter 2: Theory and Method
The interpretation of archaeological data is a rigorous process that functions under
paradigms defined by the archaeologists themselves. The use of a cohesive group of
methods and theories prevents the researcher from making wild assumptions based on
speculation. This paper focuses heavily on theories that will be used to analyze the burial
assemblages from Mound C at Etowah, Georgia, and Mound 3 at Lake Jackson, Florida.
I am relying solely on data and work done by others, and hope to build upon the
foundations that they have established. In applying the various theories and methods
outlined below to the archaeological data, I will create a more concise picture of the trade
relationships and the shared ideology that linked the two sites.
Theories relevant to this paper are divided into archaeological theory and
iconographic theory. Archaeological theory, which provides the basis of my research
paradigm, will be used to outline methods for studying mortuary remains, trade, and
warfare. These theories will be applied to the interpretation of the sociopolitical climate
7
in the region. The second set of theories involves iconographic study and interpretation.
I will begin with a broad overview of the methods used in iconographic study, but most
of these theories will pertain specifically to the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
(SECC). I will then move into a discussion of the Cult-Bringer mythology and its
application to the interpretation of SECC goods as synthesized by James Brown (2007b),
an acknowledged expert in Mississippian iconography. The Cult-Bringer plays a crucial
role in the introduction of the symbolic system used by the elites at the Etowah and Lake
Jackson sites used to charter their social status and power. I will also outline research
surrounding the important deity known as the Birdman. I will describe the known avatars
of this deity and how these avatars affect the role and maintenance of elite status.
The methodology section will outline the process by which I applied these
theories to the burial assemblages from Mound C at Etowah and Mound 3 at Lake
Jackson. I will discuss the processes I used for gathering, organizing, and analyzing my
data at each site. I will explain my method of analysis at each site. I will also outline a
method for comparing to two sites together in order to identify patterns that could help
explain a part of the relationship between Etowah and Lake Jackson.
Archaeological Theory
Mortuary Analysis
Mortuary analysis has been a part of archaeology since its inception as a
discipline. C. J. Thomsen—who first classified artifacts by stone, bronze, and iron—
recognized as early as 1836 that burials are closed systems (Thomsen 1969), so providing
no disturbance, all artifacts found in a single burial can be confidently grouped together.
8
Unfortunately, establishing links among artifact types is only the first step in the
interpretation of meaning.
Several attempts were made throughout the twentieth century to create a
theoretical method for examining burials. Burials of individuals with extremely elevated
social status were easily identifiable based on the large amounts of precious goods in the
tomb. However, the general consensus by archaeologists was that small degrees of social
organization were not discernable from the burial practices of a society (Brown 1981).
Lewis Binford (1971), arguably one of the most influential anthropological theorists of
the twentieth century, used ethnographic analogy to produce a method of burial analysis.
He studied burial practices in over 300 living societies with varying levels of social
complexity and identified three areas of mortuary practices that aid in the interpretation
of fine degrees of stratification. First, he focused on the time and effort expended in the
treatment of the body. He found that typically longer and more complex preparations
were common to all stratified societies, despite the varied methods of preparation. The
second area Binford identified was the type of the burial facility utilized, with complex
burial structures indicating more complex levels of social stratification. Finally, his
ethnographic research verified the established archaeological concept that burial furniture,
or goods placed with a body, has a direct relationship to the status of an individual. In an
egalitarian society, burial methods are similar for all individulas, but burials containing a
variety of grave goods that vary in quality are indicative of stratified society.
Lewis Binford’s (1971) model was adopted and expanded upon by archaeologists
Robert Chapman and Klavs Randsborg (1981). They focused exclusively on elite burials
and were able to modify Binford’s mortuary facility criterion. Chapman and Randsborg
9
argued that the amount of energy expended in creating the burial facility could be linked
directly to the status of an individual regardless of the shape of the mortuary facility.
They went on to demonstrate that the segregation of formal burial areas is usually
associated with social groups who had control over the rights and use of restricted
resources (Chapman & Randsborg 1981:17). In other words, groups that remain
segregated from the general population after death had privileged access to goods during
their lifetime. As I will demonstrate later, this idea plays a crucial role in the analysis of
the elite burial assemblages at the archaeology sites of Etowah and Lake Jackson.
James Brown (1981) applies the methods developed by Binford (1971) and by
Chapman & Randsborg (1981) to analyze societies with less distinct social stratification.
First, Brown argues that all mortuary practices found in a single society must be studied
to avoid the creation of false social groups. Stratification of society becomes evident
when all types of burial procedures found within a culture are compared. Although burial
furniture may be present in all levels of society, Brown’s comparative method can help
determine social stratification by identifying changes in the volume of grave goods.
Brown also examines the quality of materials used for each artifact, because elite
authority in many societies is displayed through the use of specific goods not available to
everyone in the society.
Trade in Chiefdoms
In chiefdoms, elite power is demonstrated through access to rare or restricted
goods and is often manifested through direct control over the production and exchange
networks by which these goods travel. This control ensures that artisans are crafting
goods solely for ritual use by the elite class. Often a separate trade network is established
10
to facilitate the exchange of items restricted to the elite class. These trade relationships of
elite artifacts are referred to as Prestige Goods Networks (King 2003).
Original chiefdom models argued that the control of trade by the elite class
reduced internal social stresses through the balanced redistribution of goods (see Sahlins
1958; Service 1962; or Fried 1967). However, in a much cited study on the
archaeological identification of chiefdoms, Christopher Peebles & Susan Kus (1977)
argue that chiefdoms do not necessarily function along reciprocal lines. Instead, chiefs
reward or purchase loyalty by providing lesser elites with access to specialized goods that
are not available to society at large. Using an enthno-historical approach, Peebles and
Kus demonstrate that Hawaiian chiefs would often provide their closest family and
trusted allies with control over areas that had the means to produce prestige goods. The
chiefs would then redistribute these specialized goods, which were produced under the
supervision of their allies, to rival elites as a means of buying their support.
Goods that are reserved to the elite class are considered to be imbued with sacred
power. While there are no cultural universals behind the selection of ritual goods, Mary
Helms (1993) has identified a correlation between geographic distance and the source of
goods that possess supernatural powers. Using a wide variety of ethnographic and
archaeological evidence, Helms showed that many cultures applied the structure of their
society to the physical and supernatural worlds. The areas closest to the culture center of
a society were considered to be the most ordered, but the ―normal‖ world faded as the
distance from the center increased. Traditional societies often viewed the geographic
boundary between the known and unknown areas of the earth to be equivalent to a
11
supernatural boundary. Items that were imported from outside this boundary were
considered to be imbued with supernatural power.
Many researchers have noted the existence of long distance trade networks
throughout the SECC. These trade networks functioned as paths along which rare
goods—such as copper, marine shell, galena, and mica—were distributed over hundreds
of kilometers (Larson 1971; Brown 1975; Brain & Phillips 1996; Hally 2007). In a
detailed discussion of these trade networks, Brown, Kerber, & Winters (1990) argue that
chiefs monopolize access to rare goods by controlling traders and trade routes. Under
elite supervision, rare goods are crafted into ritual items, which can be consumed locally
or reinserted into the Prestige Goods Network. Adam King, an expert on the Etowah site,
has shown that Etowah was strategically located over a gulf coast trade route that
originated near Lake Jackson. The domination of this route gave elites from Etowah
exclusive access to the control and spread of ritual goods throughout the region (2003;
see Fig. 2-1).
Warfare in the SECC
Adam King (2003) writes that chiefly power based upon trade is inherently
unstable, resulting inevitably in warfare. However, without a battlefield, clearly
identifying warfare in the archaeological record is difficult. Most often, the evidence for
warfare in a society is circumstantial, but several researchers have provided methods by
which it can be inferred.
Robert Carneiro, a former curator of South American ethnology at the American
Museum of Natural History, has argued that warfare is a necessary condition for the
12
evolution of complex societies (1970:734). He argues that warfare exists in simple
Figure 2-1 This is a map of the proposed Prestige Goods Network that flowed between Lake Jackson,
Etowah, and other Mississippian ceremonial centers (source King 2003:294).
societies in the form of raids and attacks on neighboring villages in order to obtain
portable resources. In raid based warfare, there is no effort to obtain land or subjugate
conquered peoples. Carneiro claims that environmental circumscription is the catalyst
that shifts the goals of warfare to the possession of land and renewable resources. This
new goal becomes the sufficient condition for the evolution of social complexity. In
13
other words, villages go to war to obtain neighboring lands as their own resources
becomes limited by population growth or drought. In order to more efficiently exploit
this new land, conquered populations are subjugated and forced to pay tribute in the form
of food or labor. Carneiro’s model claims that social infrastructure will increase in
complexity in order to handle the new revenue, land, and workforce obtained by war.
Carneiro (1970) moves beyond environmental circumscription to argue that any
form of limitation can play a role in increasing the control of a ruling class. Since both
Northern Georgia and the Florida Panhandle contain vast amounts of arable land and
reliable, the Etowah and Lake Jackson polities would likely have experienced social
circumscription. As mentioned previously, research by Brown, Kerber, & Winters
(1990) showed that elites in many societies held exclusive rights to the production and
distribution of ritual goods. The Etowah site is located near copper deposits that
provided the raw materials for much of their elite regalia, and the Lake Jackson site is
located on the Gulf Coast with exclusive access to the Busycon shell used for gorgets and
pendants (see Fig 2-2). The control of these resources could have limited the availability
of these goods for elites in other chiefdoms, forcing trade negotiations. Severely limited
trade would have increased social circumscription and led to warfare.
The cybernetic model of chiefdoms theorized by Peebles and Kus (1977)
demonstrates that chiefdoms have widespread organized methods for alleviating the least
predictable problems that affect society. For example, if rainfall is sporadic, then
societies will establish multiple methods of food collection to prepare for unexpected
losses. Likewise, Peebles and Kus state if warfare is the least predictable occurrence in
society, chiefdoms can be identified through the existence of elaborate defense
14
mechanisms. Since Etowah and Lake Jackson have been established as a chiefdom level
society through several other lines of research (Larson 1971; Scarry 1984; Scarry 1990b;
King 2003), the model can be reversed to look for evidence of warfare. If warfare
occurred in either polity, it can be identified by evidence of an organized method of that
site’s elites to prevent its more devastating effects.
Iconography in the SECC
Iconographic Study
A systematic method for iconographic study was first laid down by the prominent
European art historian, Erwin Panofsky (1939). He divided artistic analysis into three
major divisions: natural, iconography, and iconology. Natural analysis is the systematic
foundation of iconography that involves the identification of the basic elements in an
artistic work. Elements are the simplest form of artistic expression and include points
and lines, which combine to form motifs or recurring patterns in the artwork. The natural
Figure 4-2: On the left is a Hightower anthropomorphic style gorget. These gorgets were carved on
the inside wall of a Busycon sp. shell, commonly called a whelk (source Dye 2004:194).
15
level of analysis is based solely upon observation and does not rely upon cultural
knowledge. The second level in Panofsky’s, iconography, involves linking motifs to
themes, which are the conventional meanings of an artistic representation. Cultural
knowledge is necessary for iconographic interpretation. A modern example is an
interpretation of waving as a gesture of greeting in the U.S. Iconology is the third level
in Panofsky’s hierarchy and requires an intuitive understanding behind the symbolic
representation. The ability of an outside researcher successfully performing iconological
interpretation is heavily debated because of the massive amount of subtle cultural traits
and patterns inherent in any symbolic representation. Building upon the previous hand
waving example, the identification of the greeter’s social class based on their gesture
would be an iconological interpretation.
A major problem in archaeological iconographic interpretation is the spread of
motifs. In an analysis of Middle American art work, Harvard professor of Mesoamerican
archaeology, Tatiana Proskouriakoff (1955), notes that the visual expression of meaning
is rigidly bound inside a particular culture. However, the boundaries of a culture are
generally porous and allow motifs to spread through trade and diffusion. Local cultures
then begin to reproduce the foreign motifs but apply local interpretations to their style
and meaning. The identification of individual culture groups is necessary in order to
correctly interpret motifs.
Jon Muller (2007), an archaeology professor from Southern Illinios University-
Carbondale, uses the Panofskian method to interpret the artwork in the Southeastern
Ceremonial Complex. He then argues that iconographic interpretation must occur as a
part of the overall interpretation of a cultural assemblage. In Muller’s opinion, SECC
16
artwork should be linked to carbon 14 dating. Researchers should understand that these
dates signify the final usage of the art, and not the time of its creation. Once absolute
dates are determined, iconography can be used to establish relative sequences of motif
evolution over time and space. These series would also allow researchers to identify
hierlooming that occurred over successive generations before being interred in a burial.
The Cult Bringer
The relationship between the Muskhogean myth of the Cult-Bringer and the
copper plates common throughout the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex was first
identified by Antonio Waring (1977). Citing ethnographic sources, Waring writes that
the Natchez and many other tribes claim direct descent from a supernatural known as the
Cult-Bringer. In many of the myths, this being was linked directly to brass and copper
plates that were imbued with supernatural power. Brass plates originate during historic
times, but copper plates have been found at many prehistoric sites in the southeast
including Etowah and Lake Jackson. Ethnographic sources demonstrate that their use as
elite regalia extended well into historic times (see Fig. 2-3).
F. Kent Reilly, III (2007) and James Brown (2004, 2007a) have built upon the
ideas presented by Waring that link the Cult-Bringer directly to the spread of the
Southeastern Ceremonial Complex. Brown claims the Muskhogean cult-bringer was an
anthropomorphic supernatural who introduced a new religion symbolized by these copper
plates. After living with the people and imparting his wisdom, the individual died.
Brown argues that the copper plates found throughout the Southeast demonstrate the
spread of the Cult-Bringer religion and form the basis of the SECC.
17
These plates were produced in the Late Braden style at Cahokia, Illinois, and were
part of a unique method of ritualized exchange. Their appearance in various centers
throughout the Mississippian world is highly selective. Brown claims, ―[These copper
plates] suggest the appearance of a specific cult, because these precious objects contain
too much power to be treated as objects of ordinary trade‖ (2004: 119). Almost all of
these plates contain images of raptor birds or anthropomorphic beings clad in raptor
regalia, and ethnographic sources demonstrate they were often placed in leather and cloth
bundles (Waring 1977).
Ritual bundling was practiced throughout North America. A recent work by
Mesoamerican art historians F. Kent Reilly, III and Julia Guernsey (2006) summarizes
the uses of sacred bundles in Mesoamerica. Bundles function as a means of concealing
Figure 2-3: “Outina’s Order of March” by Theodore DeBry. Note the copper breastplates worn by
the three individuals (source Dye 2004:193).
18
the sacred power of the objects they contained and can only be opened as part of a
ceremony. Bundles are an integral part of mortuary practices by establishing ancestor
worship and lineage continuity. Bundles in Mesoamerica were also directly linked to the
establishment of political authority and power. Although the geographic and temporal
distance between Mesoamerica and the southeastern United States prevents a direct
application of these Mesoamerican concepts, similarities have been recorded in
ethnographic research among tribes indigenous to the southeast. Among the Osage, each
clan had a corporately owned bundle whose power determined the status of the clan (see
LaFlesche 1999). Creek tribes were known from historic sources to bundle the copper
plates used in their rituals and ceremonies (Waring 1977). As I will show later, the
copper plates recovered from the Lake Jackson site contain preserved remnants of cloth
that demonstrate that the ritual bundling of sacred objects originated in prehistoric times.
The Birdman in Myth and Archaeology
George Keyes (1994) has shown that there is a link between myths and elite
power. Myths underscore the supernatural basis used by the ruling class to charter their
elite social positions and associated ceremonies. He concludes, ―If mythology links the
creation of ceremony to the elite, the position of the elite is further justified‖ (Keyes
1994: 112). James Brown (2007a) used Keyes’ model to synthesize certain aspects of
Native American mythology to the iconography of the pre-historic copper plates. Using
myths from the Siouxan speaking Osage and Winnebago, Brown has linked the Birdman
to three specific avatars. The birdman can be known as Red Horn, He-Who-Wears-
Human-Heads-as-Earrings, and He-Who-Is-Hit-in-the-Face-with-Deer-Lungs. Brown
19
then links the Siouxan Red-Horn to the Muskhogean deity, Morning Star. This linkage is
based upon the similarities in the powers ascribed to both supernaturals.
Red Horn is a metaphorical name given to the Birdman (Brown 2007a:93). This
name typically refers to the birdman in his most human-like appearance and is
symbolized by a long braid that was dyed red. Ethnographic sources show that the elites
in many Native American tribes in the southeast would often use dyed braids or forelocks
to demonstrate social status and achievements. The ritual braid and forelock are also
seen on the copper plates recovered from both Lake Jackson and Etowah. In the
Winnebago and Osage myths, the Red-Horn avatar is associated with warfare and
physical prowess.
He-Who-Wears-Human-Heads-as-Earrings is the name given to the birdman by
the gods (Brown 2007a:94). This avatar is symbolized by small, long nosed god
maskettes found throughout the southeast and date to the 12th and 13
th centuries. Their
use as earrings is seen on the 12th
century statue from Craig’s Mound at Spiro, OK known
as ―The Seated Warrior‖ whose earrings are in the shape of faces. He-Who-Wears-
Human-Heads-as-Earrings is an avatar of the Birdman that is specifically linked to
fertility.
He-Who-Is-Hit-in-the-Face-with-Deer-Lungs is the most sacred avatar of
Morning Star (Brown 2007a:95). In this persona, the birdman is associated with the
themes of death and rebirth. In the Winnebago myth, Red Horn is able to transform into
an arrow, which many Native American tribes liken to the soul’s flight into the afterlife.
This avatar is symbolized in the bi-lobed arrow motif seen in the headdress ornaments
represented on copper plates and gorgets throughout the SECC (see Fig 2-4).
20
Brown (2007a) writes that mythological stories are not enough to ensure the
maintenance of elite power, so the reproduction of Birdman
symbols as elite paraphernalia is highly significant. He
argues that elite power must be visible in the form of ritual
icons that display the social charter myths as a reminder of
the origin of elite power. This same imagery must act as a
medium that maintains exclusive access to the supernatural
realm. Generally, the power of an individual leader can be
measured by his success in limiting all forms of access to
the supernatural. Brown claims an effective method for
increasing power is by claiming direct descent from a
godhead (64). He has long argued that the ritual items
found in elite burials throughout the Mississippian world
represent an embodiment of the sacred (Brown 1985,
Brown 1997).
All of these themes would provide the elites with a strong power base. In taking
on the identity of Morning Star, they would show that they were able to protect their
people from invasion. They would also be socially sanctioned to go forth to fight battles
to gain honor and power in the name of the people. They would have a monopoly on the
afterlife and would exert a strong control over their people by embodying the power of
reincarnation.
Methodology
Figure 2-4: This is the Rogan
plate #2. Note the Bilobed
Arrow as part of his headdress.
(source Brown 2007a: 78)
21
The Lake Jackson and Etowah sites clearly fall under the broad banner of the
Southeastern Ceremonial Complex. However, they are also distinct cultures that are
separated by several hundred miles. As I review the data, it appears to me that the
Etowah complex spread northward through Eastern Tennessee, and the Lake Jackson
complex spread westward along the Gulf Coast (Payne 1994a, 1994b). The theories in
this chapter will be applied to the elite mortuaries at each site to define the adaptation of
the SECC in each culture. I hope to add to the understanding of the relationship between
the Etowah and Lake Jackson polities.
I will begin by analyzing the artifacts at Etowah followed by a separate analysis
of the artifact assemblage at Lake Jackson. My analyses will begin with a summary of
the history of each site. Using data from the various excavations, I will chart the elite
burial goods in a chronological format and look for temporal patterns in the use of both
local and non-local goods as ritual regalia. I will apply the various theories for
identifying warfare to see if there is a correlation between warfare and ritual regalia.
I will then compare the two sites beginning with a simple chronological
comparison between each site using established radio carbon dates. Once I present a
side-by-side chronology, I will have a basis from which to compare the burial goods. I
will examine the similarities in the use of local and non-local materials at the two sites
before proceeding to an iconographic comparison of the elite regalia. In doing so, I will
demonstrate a clearer picture of how Etowah and Lake Jackson interacted in the pre-
historic period.
22
Chapter 3: The Etowah Site
The Etowah site, near Cartersville, GA, was the capital of a Mississippian period
chiefdom. The site consists of several constructed mounds that functioned in a variety of
ways. Mound C at Etowah was the mortuary mound, where elites would be interred after
their deaths. The data for this chapter comes from the artifacts recovered from that
mound. Mound C at Etowah was thoroughly destroyed by a series of excavations and has
since been completely rebuilt. Each excavation unearthed multiple graves that contained
individuals who were richly adorned with copper, shell, and stone artifacts. I will relate
these artifacts to the history of the Etowah site and show how an elite cult was imported
that used warfare and mythical symbols to establish the position of the new elites. I will
then explore the circumstantial evidence for warfare at Etowah. Using the burial data
from Brain & Phillips (1996) and the grave seriation developed by King (2004, 2007), I
have identified a clear shift in elite mortuary goods. I will combine this data with other
evidence for conflict by arguing that as warfare increased at Etowah, long distance trade
networks began to be circumscribed. While regional trade continued, Etowah’s elites
23
were forced to abandon locally produced shell gorgets as symbols of power. Instead,
they began to produce sociotechnic weapons to symbolize strength and power in warfare.
Site Geography
Etowah is located in northwest Georgia on the Etowah River and was first
occupied circa AD1000. In its final form, it is comprised of six earthen mounds labeled
A – F and was surrounded by a moat and a wall (see Fig. 3-1). Mound A is the largest of
the earthen constructions at 19 m in height. King (2003) hypothesizes that this mound
was likely used as the chiefly residence. Mounds B is the next largest in size. Mound B
Figure 3-1: The Wilbanks phase Etowah site (circa AD1375) at its greatest known extent of mound
construction (source King 2003:282).
24
had a series of structures on it and was likely used as a location for ceremonial activity.
While A and B were likely residential mounds, Mound C was clearly a mortuary mound
associated with the elite dead and may have had a charnel house on it. Due to the poor
standards of excavation at the turn of the 20th Century and the total destruction of the
mound, we will forever be uncertain about the nature of its structures (Larson 1971; King
2003). The Etowah River runs along the south side of the complex. An examination of
the map reveals at least two borrow pits on the northern edge of the site that were the
source of earth used in mound construction. These pits were connected by a ditch or
moat, on the inside edge of which was a palisade wall (Larson 1971; King 2007).
The dating of the building of Etowah, and specifically Mound C, has been hotly
contested in recent years. Some scholars such as Larson (1971) and Brain & Phillips
(1996) have maintained that it was constructed in the late 15th to early 16
th centuries.
However, they have come under heavy criticism for the lack of solid archaeological
techniques in stating their hypotheses. Most scholars (Brown 2007b; King 2007;
Marceaux & Dye 2007; Hally 2007) now maintain that Mound C was built entirely
within the Wilbanks phase.
Etowah was first occupied around AD1000 by an egalitarian chiefdom (King
2003). King has divided the site into several temporal phases (see Table 3-1). While
hard evidence is lacking, it is likely that the construction of Mound A began during the
Early Etowah phase. The construction of Mound C began with two dense midden pits
filled with potsherds and animal bones. There were also at least two structures, which in
connection with the midden pits, are indicative of communal feasting and sacred space.
25
This evidence has led King (2003) to believe that at its earliest, Etowah was a simple
chiefdom based upon a corporate structure. King says,
These data suggest that the organization of the chiefdom
centered at Etowah had the following as important
principles: group rather than individual decision making,
little or no use of prestige goods to symbolize individual
social status, and an emphasis on solidarity building at the
apparent expense of aggrandizing individuals. These
organizational characteristics are consistent with a
chiefdom whose structure is based on what Blanton and
colleagues have called the corporate political–economic
strategy (King 2003:290 citations omitted).
King (2007) later noted that this Etowah Period phase chiefdom lacks representational art,
other than general cosmological themes such as the cross in circle (130). After nearly
one hundred years of occupation, the site was briefly abandoned for unknown reasons.
Starting in the Early Wilbanks phase around AD1250, the site was suddenly
reoccupied on a large scale. The majority of construction at the site occurred at this time.
Table 3-1: Etowah Site Occupational Sequence
Date
Period
Regional period
designation
Phase
A.D. 1475–1550
A.D. 1375–1475
A.D. 1325–1375
A.D. 1250–1325
A.D. 1200–1250
A.D. 1100–1200
A.D. 1000–1100
Late Mississippian
Late Mississippian
Middle Mississippian
Middle Mississippian
Middle Mississippian
Early Mississippian
Early Mississippian
Late Lamar
Early Lamar
Late Savannah
Late Savannah
Early Savannah
Late Etowah
Early Etowah
Brewster
Unoccupied
Late Wilbanks
Early Wilbanks
Unoccupied
Late Etowah
Early Etowah
Source: King 2003: 281
26
Mound A reached its maximum size; a plaza was installed at its base; and Mound C was
founded as an elite burial structure (King 2004). The iconography from this period also
shows dramatic changes. There is an introduction of Hixon and Hightower gorgets,
which carry symbols and motifs connected to the cosmos and the supernatural (Lankford
2004, 2007; Marceaux & Dye 2007).
Around the beginning of the Late Wilbanks phase in AD1325, a bastion wall was
built around the edge of the ditch that surrounded the site. The function of this wall is
unknown; however, it has been speculated that the wall was defensive or perhaps used to
isolate sacred space similar to the wall at Cahokia (Larson 1971; King 2004; Brown
2004). The Late Wilbanks phase of Etowah came to an end in AD1375, when the site
was abruptly abandoned. The wall was destroyed by fire at the same time, and Mound C
appears to have been deserted.
Excavations at Etowah
The first archaeologist to excavate at
Etowah was John P. Rogan, an employee of the
Smithsonian Institute (Thomas 1894). Lacking
the archaeological methods and controls of today,
he tested various mounds in search of burials and
grave artifacts (King 2003). As a result, most
stratigraphy was ignored and went unrecorded.
Rogan reported evidence of a structure on Mound
B, but his most important excavations were those
at Mound C. There he found several graves
Figure 3-2: This is the Rogan plate #1
that was recovered at Etowah. (source
Brown 2007a:78)
27
containing shell beads, carved gorgets, and the spectacular set of copper plates known
today as the Rogan plates (see Figs. 3-2). He reached the burials at a depth of
approximately 3 m, so he ceased digging, presuming that he had reached ground level.
Warren K. Moorehead (1979) was the next excavator to explore Mound C. He
began work in 1925 and continued over the next two seasons. Today his methods are
considered unsystematic, and because he used an unusual numbering system, his records
pose problems for modern archaeologists (King 2007). Moorehead’s field notes,
publications, and catalogue data often contradict each other. Many of the artifacts he
described cannot currently be located (Brain & Phillips 1996; King 2007). Like Rogan
before him, Moorehead also focused extensively on elaborate burials and often ignored or
neglected simple ones. After removing the entire summit of the mound and excavating
its southeast flank to ground level, he had identified a total of 110 new graves. He found
stone celts, copper badges, shell gorgets, and repoussé copper plates similar to those
recovered by Rogan.
Lewis H. Larson was charged by the Georgia Historical Commission to
recommence excavations at Mound C in order to discover its original dimensions (Larson
1971, 1989). Most archaeologists believed that Moorehead had discovered the vast
majority of the burials in Mound C. However, in a series of excavations from 1954 to
1962, Larson discovered an additional 244 burials (King 2007). He used careful
stratigraphic controls and provided a detailed composite of the burials that ringed the
mound. Larson also recognized that the mound was built in phases, and the burials were
interred in an earlier group and a latter group that ringed the mound (Larson 1971).
Despite his excellent work, the inconsistent and vague records left by Rogan and
28
Moorehead have made it nearly impossible to link the data from the three different
excavations (Larson 1971).
Brain & Phillips (1996) created a composite map of the burials at Mound C based
on their analysis of the different mortuary practices used (see Fig. 3-3). King (2004)
makes the further step to link the Rogan and Moorehead burials with Larson’s ―pre-final
mantle‖ group since the majority of
their burials were in stone-lined tombs
or pits. Larson’s ―final mantle‖ group
was comprised of either pit burials or
log-lined tombs (Larson 1971, King
2004).
The Elite Status of Mound C
There is no debate today
regarding the paramount chiefdom
status of the Wilbanks phase Etowah
polity. Mound C burials show distinct
effort expenditure in two of the three
areas outlined by Lewis Binford (1971)
and James Brown (1981) and mentioned
in Chapter 2. The size of the mound itself
shows extensive effort was required in its construction. As Chapman & Randsborg
(1981) have argued, the amount of energy expended on a burial correlates to the status of
that individual. Mound C was built in seven different stages (see Fig. 3-4), indicative of
Figure 5-3: Burial map showing a hypothetical
overlay of the Rogan, Moorehead, and Larson
excavations (source Brain & Phillips 1996: 166).
29
ritual reburial (Knight 1986). Elites were able to muster the workforce necessary for
repeated reconstructions of the mound. Finally, Mound C was surrounded by a wall
during each phase of its construction, further indicating its status as sacred space.
Elites were likely buried in the center of the Mound C during its initial three
stages. The node on the north face of the mound in stage 4 was specially constructed to
cover a high elite burial (Larson burial 57; see Fig 3-5). King (2007) believes that this
marks a shift in the burial of the highest elites in the summit of the mound (such as Rogan
―A‖) to the periphery of the mound. The lack of burials found in the first 3 m of the
summit is circumstantial evidence supporting King’s claim. He states, ―While such
deeply placed burials are not unheard of…creating the complex arrangements of human
remains, burial artifacts, and limestone slabs would have been made excessively difficult
at such depths‖ (King 2007: 123). This shift in burial location becomes one of the
primary marks of the division between the Early and Late Wilbanks phases.
Etowah, the Cult-Bringer, and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
The Etowah polity in the Wilbanks phase is unique because it appeared to form
very rapidly. Based on archaeological
evidence, the area was reoccupied and
intensive mound construction began
immediately in connection with new
iconographic forms seen in their
mortuary practices circa AD 1250
(King 2003, 2004, 2007). This sudden
change in local practices marks the Figure 3-4: Construction stages of Mound C (source King 2004: 156)
30
beginning of the Early Wilbanks phase. Elite status became associated with the Birdman
imagery crafted on locally produced gorgets and imported copper plates. As previously
mentioned (see Chapter 2), copper plates symbolize the introduction of a new religion by
the culture hero known as the cult-bringer (Brown 2004, 2007a; King 2007). The
construction of mound platforms, the rapid shift to elite burials, and the internment of
copper plates in the earliest of these burials (Rogan A-F) indicate a marked shift in the
organization of the social and political nature of their society.
The Rogan plates have been hypothesized as originating in the area of Cahokia,
IL (see Fig. 2-2). Brown (2007a, 2007b) identifies the plate from Rogan burial ―A‖ as
part of the corpus of artwork known as the ―Greater Braden Style‖. Other plates found
by Moorehead are in a slightly different style, indicating local reproduction. The
presence of both heirloomed and new copper plates in the assemblages of Mound C
points to a rapid adoption of the iconography with local reproduction. The Rogan plates
have elicited a great deal of discussion in the analysis of their themes (Moorehead 1979;
Strong 1989; Dye 2004). The current interpretation links this figure to the mythical hero
Morning Star or Red Horn, based largely on the work by Brown (see Brown 2007a,
2007b).
These copper plates have strong ties to the Cult-Bringer Mythology, which was
summarized in Chapter 2. According to Waring (1977), these sacred plates were carried
wrapped as a sacred bundle. In the two Rogan plates, the birdman has an elaborate
headdress with a prominent bi-lobed arrow. In front of the headdress, near the forehead,
is a rectangular object with rounded edges and woven cross-hatches. This has been
31
recently linked to a sacred bundle (Reilly 2007). The presence of the sacred bundle is a
direct indication of the Cult-bringer role that this mythical figure played.
Burials during the Early Wilbanks phase also include shell gorgets. The most
common style at Etowah was the Hightower Anthropomorphic style. Brain & Phillips
(1996) subdivided the Hightower style (their ―Big Toco‖) into four subtypes: Buddha,
headsman, Morning Star, and mortal combat (44). Many researchers (King 2007; Brown
Figure 3-5: This image shows the three different systems used to make excavation maps. Rogan’s map dates
to the 1890s, Moorehead’s Map to the 1920s, and Larson’s map to the 1950s.
32
2007a; Marceaux & Dye 2007) reject their new nomenclature for these gorgets but find
their sub-divisions useful. Marceaux & Dye perform a closer analysis of the headsman
and Morning Star themed gorgets. They believe that this style is local to the southern
Appalachians in eastern Tennessee or northern Georgia (2007:169). Their findings agree
with others that this style is likely a local reproduction of themes derived from the Rogan
Plates (see Brown 2007a, 2007b; King 2007; Larson 1971). The use of Birdman symbols
as elite paraphernalia demonstrates that elite status was based on the religious ideology
imported by the cult-bringer. Their regalia are a physical link to supernatural power. At
Etowah, locally manufactured goods soon replaced manufactured goods imported from
other areas, but the power of the symbols and motifs was not diminished (see Helms
1993).
Elite Artifacts at Etowah
Etowah clearly was an active participant in a Prestige Goods Economy fueled by
long-distance trade (see Chapter 2). The elite burials in Mound C show a wide variety of
both locally produced and imported goods (see Fig. 3-5). Stone celts were locally
produced and were found in several burials including Moorehead burial 35 and Larson
burials 135 and 204 (Larson 1971). Locally produced Hightower gorgets were found
with Rogan burial ―g‖ (possibly), Moorehead burials 13, 37, and 137 (Brain & Phillips
1996). Imported items included the Braden style Rogan plates mentioned early and mica
that possibly originated in North Carolina. By taking on the role of Morning Star, the
newly formed elites in the Etowah chiefdom were able to quickly consolidate control and
join the Prestige Goods Economy that seemed to be flowing out of Cahokia (Penney
1985; Brown et al. 1990; Brown 2007a, 2007b).
33
As previously mentioned, I chronologically charted the burials in Brain & Phillips
(1996) according to King’s dating (2003). I focused primarily on stone and copper
artifacts, and I excluded burial information regarding ceramics because of other studies
already completed in that area (see King 1997). Several patterns emerged that I want to
note (see Appendix A).
Headdresses (see Larson 1959) do not appear very common (Brown 1975; Scarry
2007). Using Larson (1971) and Brain & Phillips (1996) as my data sources, I count 15
identifiable headdresses from the roughly 360 burials recovered from Mound C. Based
on Larson’s claim that ―in all but one instance, the sheet-copper symbol badges found in
Mound C were associated directly with the skulls of the individuals in the graves‖ (1959:
110), there is a possibility that the limited data in Brain & Phillips does not reveal all the
headdress burials. I have also extrapolated the possible occurrence of seven more
headdresses based upon Moorehead’s notes (Brain & Phillips 1996; Moorehead 1979).
However, the sparse data and lack of provenance mean that while other headdresses may
have occurred, they were either not identified or not noticed.
Warfare in the Late Wilbanks Phase
Warfare was endemic to northern Georgia in the Late Wilbanks phase (Dye 2004;
King 2003, 2007). By the beginning of the 14th century, most major mound centers in
northern Georgia had been abandoned indicating some form of widespread social unrest.
The archaeological evidence for the destruction of Etowah by warfare is indicated by
three main factors: the destruction of Mound C, the construction of a palisade, and the
creation of a plaza at the base of Mound A.
34
The final burials in Mound C, Larson burials 1 and 15, strongly suggest a
desecration of the temple by conquerors. King explains that, ―one of the greatest injuries
an invading army could inflict was to ransack the temple containing the sacred remains of
the chiefly ancestors‖ (King 2003: 295). The tomb for burial 15 appeared hastily
constructed with the mortuary goods in ―complete disarray‖ (Larson 1971: 65) according
to the published reports. Two marble statues unique to Etowah were dumped into the pit
on top of one another so that an arm was broken off one of them (Larson 1971; King
2003). These statues may have been representations of the ruling elites’ ancestors
(Knight 1986). Ear spools and shell beads were mingled with disarticulated human bones.
These objects appear to have been flung down the ramp leading up to the mound summit.
This is distinct evidence of the desecration of the building on the summit of Mound C.
Around the transition from the Early to Late Wilbanks phase, the two borrow pits
used for mound construction were connected with a ditch that ringed the site (see Fig 3-1).
Then a bastion wall was constructed on the inside of the ditch. Both of these projects
were done during the Late Wilbanks phase (King 2007). Increased warfare and raids
would be an obvious reason why the Etowah polity’s elites would have mandated the
building of these labor intensive structures (Peebles and Kus 1977).
A raised clay plaza was also installed in front of Mound A during this time which
would have been the center of community rituals. Dye (2004) argues that there is a link
between warfare regalia, ritual, and the power of the elite status. Warfare art is a clear
representation of the warriors’ prowess in battle and serves as a physical reminder of their
battle deeds. Elites would have been accorded battle honors in elaborate ceremonies that
took place in public plazas, which were the ―lynchpin of their chiefly and priestly
35
authority‖ (Dye 2004:198). Since the plaza was built concurrent with the palisade, I
believe this structure is a further indication of an increase in the frequency of warfare.
After examining the mortuary data, I believe I can add a fourth piece of evidence
to the data for warfare. Several scholars have noted the transition in mortuary practices
from the early to the Late Wilbanks phases (Larson 1971; King 2007). Most burials in all
phases were simple pits. However, some burials received special treatment. Burials from
the pre-final mantle group (construction stages 1-3) were lined with stone slabs. Final
mantle burials were wood-lined or reed-lined burials. While Binford (1971) and Brown
(1975) have warned that shifts in mortuary practices may have little intrinsic meaning
other than a change in tastes, I believe that the model present by Peebles & Kus (1977)
could help explain this shift. Elites strove to maintain their status by setting apart distinct
burial types. As warfare increased, using stone was too costly. Wood was locally
abundant and was already being harvested for the construction of the palisade. The shift
from stone to wood may have been a pragmatic shift to prevent burial ceremonies from
being delayed by warfare or raids.
Iconographic Evidence for Warfare
King (2003) recognizes that the destabilization of any wide geographic region
likely has many causes, but he feels that a Prestige Goods Economy was the catalyst for
their demise. He writes that chiefdoms founded on trade economics are inherently
unstable, because they are unable to avoid entering into regional conflicts over control
and distribution of goods. Robert Carneiro’s (1970) theory on circumscription also
supports this premise (see Chapter 2). The same desire for material wealth that
stimulates expansion and craft specialization also motivates their political rivals to attack
36
these elites in order to gain access to their resources. King concludes, ―The same
strategic location that brought people back to Etowah during the Early Wilbanks phase
may have been the reason it was attacked and suddenly collapsed. Other leaders in the
region… may have attempted to gain control of the flow of SECC goods by forcibly
removing Etowah from the network‖ (King 2003: 296). Using this premise and
combining it with the existing evidence for warfare, I examined my data for obvious
iconographic patterns that would support this hypothesis.
As warfare increased throughout the Late Wilbanks phase, I believe an
iconographic shift occurred from shell gorgets to sociotechnic weapons. The decline in
shell gorgets occurs at the dividing point between the Early and Late Wilbanks phases,
circa AD 1325. Only two of the thirty-plus gorgets were found in Larson’s final mantle
burial (Brain & Phillips 1996; King 2007). One of these gorgets was found in Burial 57,
which is the first of the Late Wilbanks burials in mound construction stage 4. Only one
shell gorget appears to have been buried during Stages 5 to 7 of mound construction. The
act of heirlooming could account for this unusually late gorget.
An alternative hypothesis has been presented to explain the decline of gorget
usage by Brain & Phillips (1996). These researchers place their temporal model at the
arrival of the Spanish in the area circa AD 1540. They suggest that the decline in gorget
usage was due to both the disruption caused by the European conquest and the
availability of the gorgets to non-elites. Most researchers disagree with Brain and
Phillip’s temporal model (see Brown 2007a; King 2007; Hally 2007). Hally (2007)
argues that elites either ceded or lost exclusive control over the gorgets no earlier than the
beginning of the 14th
century. Since gorgets were being used by the average populace,
37
elites were no longer interred with them as signs of power. Knight (1997 as quoted in
Hally 2007: 220) notes that non-elites seemed to gain access to shell gorgets, but only at
the beginning of the 15th century after the decline of Etowah. Elites ultimately lost
control of the exclusive right to shell gorgets, suggesting a powerful ideological change.
My belief is that the use of shell gorgets underwent a fundamental ideological
shift from elites to non-elites because of the destruction of Etowah. As stated earlier (see
Chapter 2), Keyes (1994) mentions that myths are used to charter elite status. He says,
―Legitimizing ideologies of the elite vanish when the elite
vanish. The stories may persist, but stripped of the special
context and details that made them what they were…motifs
appear to resist the ravages of time like granite building
blocks. But the castles and towers these blocks are used to
build may tumble and be rearranged into humbler—or
perhaps merely different—structures‖ (Keyes 1994: 114,
emphasis in original).
The use of gorgets in burials was a cultural motif that reemerged at Etowah in the
Brewster phase (AD 1475 - AD 1550). The importance of gorgets remained in people’s
minds, but the Birdman imagery as an elite charter was lost (see Langford 2007;
Marceaux & Dye 2007; Hally 2007). The Hightower anthropomorphic gorgets show
clear Birdman images that have warfare and individualistic themes. Later gorgets like the
Citico, Lick Creek, and Spaghetti styles seem to have lost the imagery of a Birdman
supernatural. They have reverted to either a highly stylized form of supernatural twins,
38
seen on Spaghetti style gorgets, or to broader cosmological styles that would appeal to
the population at large (Hally 2007).
Since the shift of gorgets to non-elites seems to occur later than the iconographic
shift at Etowah, we must turn elsewhere for an explanation. Returning to my analysis of
the grave assemblages, Table 3-2 summarizes the data of various burial goods separated
by the Early and Late Wilbanks phases. I noticed that overall, there is an increase in
sociotechnic weapons interred with elites that is most marked by an increase in copper
and stone axes. The same patterns tend to be seen with copper pendants and mica as well.
Stone, copper, and mica were all goods that were local to the region, while shell had to be
imported from the gulf coast. As the source of shell disappeared, elites began to
manufacture goods from local materials.
This analysis also indicates a shift from engraved images of the birdman, to
sociotechnic weapons that were associated with his image. In their analysis of Hightower
anthropomorphic gorgets and Duck River sword-form flint bifaces, Marceaux & Dye
(2007) noted the similarities between the gorget imagery and the sociotechnic weapons.
Birdman gorgets often depict the supernatural being holding either long sword-like
objects or falcon claw knives. Gorgets found at other sites depict the Birdman holding
Table 3-2: Artifact Patterning Across the Wilbanks Phase
Copper
Axes
Stone
Axes
Mono-lithic
Axes
Flint
Swords
Shell
Gorgets
Celts Stone
Palettes
Mica
Early
Wilbanks 1 0 1 3 33 0 0 3
Late
Wilbanks 6 8 1 9 2 10 7 17
39
axes or maces. All of these objects have been found at Etowah, constructed from chert,
copper, or local stone.
My research has shown that elites chose to shift to more explicit warfare imagery
rather than inscribing images of the Birdman on stone gorgets or creating new copper
plates. They produced sociotechnic tools as a visible image of their prowess in battle that
derived from their supernatural links to the Birdman. Marceaux & Dye (2007) analyze
the ―uniform‖ of elites and note that it is predominately males who are buried with
sociotechnic weapons and copper weaponry badges, while women were buried with shell
beads (2007:182). They conclude that ―throughout the Wilbanks phases, warfare-related
activities and associated rituals played a crucial role in the achievement and maintenance
of social status. Institutionalized ascribed and achieved social ranking was a critical
component of Etowah’s social and political structure‖ (2007:182 – 183; sic). Elites
struggled to maintain their power and adapted their ideology accordingly.
I believe that elites were forced into an iconographic shift for two reasons. First,
warfare was limiting or completely preventing the importation of marine shell to Etowah.
The elites at Etowah during the Wilbanks phase were obliged to begin producing ritual
regalia from local resources such as copper or stone (Larson 1971, 1989); they were also
forced to place heavier emphasis on imported goods such as mica that came from other
regions. As I have discussed, this pragmatic approach is supported by the theoretical
models of Peebles & Kus (1977) who demonstrate the ability of chiefdoms to protect
their power when threatened by forces beyond their control. The second reason for this
ideological shift is theorized by Brown (2007a). He argues that elite power is intimately
connected to their regalia and it has a recursive effect. As warfare in the north Georgia
40
region increased, I believe that images of the birdman and the cosmos incised on the
gorgets were not sufficient to embody and maintain the power of Etowah’s elites. Instead,
they began to display sociotechnic weapons in order to make the link between
supernatural power and warfare more explicit.
41
Chapter 4: The Lake Jackson Site
The Lake Jackson site is a Mississippian period mound complex located in the
Florida Panhandle northwest of Tallahassee. The site is positioned on the western shore
of the McGinnis Arm on Lake Jackson and covers approximately 19 hectares (47 acres)
(see Fig 4-1). Mound 1 is located at the far northern extreme of the site, 250 meters from
Mound 2. There is evidence of a plaza between the two mounds (Jones 1994). The
southern mound grouping consists of Mounds 2-7, which are located in a tight cluster.
Mound 2 is the largest mound and measures 11 meters high and 85 m by 95 m at the base.
Mounds 3, 5, 6, and 7 are south of Mound 2 and were separated from it by a creek that
has since been diverted. Mound 3 provided the data used in this chapter and will be the
primary focus of this article. Mound 3 has now been completely destroyed by excavation,
but it was located directly south of Mound 2. At the time of excavation, it was 5 meters
high and measured 44 m by 48 m.
42
Figure 4-1: This is the general layout of the Lake Jackson Florida site at its greatest known
extent, circa AD 1400 (source Payne 1994:231).
43
This chapter will begin with the history of the Lake Jackson site, followed by a
summary of the Fort Walton culture to which Lake Jackson belonged. I will then
summarize excavations that have occurred at the site, focusing primarily on the salvage
excavation performed from 1975-1976 by B. Calvin Jones from the Florida Historical
Commission. I will then summarize the conclusions made by Jones (1982; 1994) before
offering a revision of his statistical division of the burials into three distinct groupings. I
retained the concept of three burial phases, but I used stratigraphy instead of statistics to
separate the groups. My first burial group marks the establishment of Mound 3 by elites
from the Fort Walton culture in order to participate in the Busycon shell trade with
Etowah. The second group is marked by the adoption and display of the Cult-Bringer
mythology, a concept discussed in Chapter 2. My final group is marked by a subtle shift
in burial goods that I believe developed from broadened trade routes that opened after the
demise of the Etowah polity. To support this hypothesis, I will focus on the construction
episodes of Mound 3, the types of artifacts found in each burial phase, and the emergence
and disappearance of Birdman iconography at Lake Jackson.
The Fort Walton Culture
The Fort Walton Culture was first defined by Gordon R. Willey and R. B.
Woodbury in 1942 and was based exclusively on ceramic typology. Willey and
Woodbury noted the introduction of ceramics that were related to Southeastern
Ceremonial Complex (SECC) representations from central Alabama. These were
markedly different from the ceramics in the phase that predated the Fort Walton culture.
Although Willey and Woodbury lacked absolute dating techniques, they correctly placed
44
the Fort Walton culture as the final prehistoric culture in the Florida Panhandle just
before European contact.
In 1949, Gordon Willey expanded his definition of the Fort Walton culture (1998).
His definition remained rooted in the ceramic typologies that he had developed, but he
added traits identified from settlement patterns, local economy, and societal organization.
He used the construction of temple mounds as evidence for increased social stratification.
Willey noted that intensive agriculture was practiced and coincided with a general
migration from coastal sites to inland locations. At the time of Willey’s publications, the
lack of research in the area prevented him from fixing an inland boundary for the Fort
Walton culture (1998:454). While Willey’s traits adequately corresponded to social
conditions in this Fort Walton culture, he did not identify any diagnostic cultural traits
beyond his previously identified ceramic types (Scarry 1984).
Though many archaeologists had attempted to adjust Willey’s culture definition,
newer descriptions still relied heavily on his ceramic analysis. Also, these descriptions
treated Fort Walton as an independent development and did not relate it to other
Mississippian cultures. John F. Scarry addressed these shortcomings in his doctoral
dissertation for Case Western University (1984). He defined the Fort Walton culture as a
combination of different societies that practiced intensive maize cultivation, exploited
large land and marine animals, had a hierarchical society, settled in river valleys, and
participated in long distance trade networks of ritual goods from that displayed SECC
symbols and motifs. In his dissertation, he uses radiometric dates from multiple sites to
place the Fort Walton culture between A.D. 900/1000 and A.D. 1650. Scarry’s research
showed that the beginning of Fort Walton culture coincided with Mississippian cultural
45
emergence throughout the SECC. The culture persisted until it was disrupted by
European incursion in the 17th century.
Scarry (1984) identifies the Fort Walton culture as originating in the Apalachicola
and Chattahoochee river valleys in Southern Alabama and the far western portion of the
Florida panhandle. These sites developed from pre-existing woodland era cultures and
adapted intensive maize agriculture as populations grew and expanded. They received
SECC influences via central Alabama societies and adapted them into their own
indigenous cultures. Fort Walton then expanded eastward along the Gulf Coast until it
covered the majority of the Florida panhandle.
The Lake Jackson phase, typified by the Lake Jackson site, is located on the
eastern extreme of this expansion (see Fig 4-1). Scarry writes that ―it is a classic Fort
Walton manifestation in the sense that it had centers with pyramidal mounds and a
ceramic assemblage which includes all of the types defined by Willey as the Fort Walton
Complex‖ (1984:381). Although the number of excavations performed in the area
remains limited, test excavations have identified a number of sites linked to the Lake
Jackson phase. In his dissertation, Scarry dates the Lake Jackson phase from A.D.
1150/1200 to A.D. 1400/1450. Unfortunately, few excavations have provided
radiometric data, so his dates for the Lake Jackson site are based upon only two dates
recovered from Mound 3 at that site.
Claudine Payne (1994) further refined the temporal sequence at the Lake Jackson
site in her dissertation for the University of Florida. She felt that the temporal divisions
of an early and late Lake Jackson phase envisioned by Scarry (1984) did not allow for
accurate study of the shifts in population at the site. In her dissertation, Payne divides the
46
Lake Jackson culture into three phases with the second phase being subdivided into early
and late (see Table 4-1). She then places the construction of Mound 3 at the beginning of
the Late Lake Jackson II phase (A.D. 1250 to A.D. 1400). The mound was in use
through the Lake Jackson III phase with the final mantle being constructed toward the
end of the 15th century (Payne 1994:270).
The Lake Jackson Site
Lake Jackson was the principal city for the Lake Jackson culture and maintained
its position as a capital until historic times (Payne 1994). Contrary to the prototypical
SECC capital site of Etowah, Lake Jackson has many idiosyncrasies that deviate from the
typical pattern for Mississippian capitals. Unlike earlier Fort Walton sites, the Lake
Jackson site was not occupied by a previous culture. It is located on the southeastern
fringe of the SECC, being bordered to the east and south by non-Mississippian Floridian
cultures (Payne 1994:273). Instead of being associated directly with a river valley, it is
located in fertile hill country. The earliest researchers at the Lake Jackson site (Willey
1942; Griffin 1950) noted that there was a lack of ceramics prior to the Fort Walton
occupation. Researchers were expecting to find earlier occupations as late as the 1980s
(see Scarry 1984). However, the extensive auger testing that formed the basis of the
dissertation by Payne (1994) turned up thousands of pottery sherds, none of which pre-
Table 4-1. Lake Jackson Site Occupation Chronology
Date Phase A.D. 1500-1650
A.D. 1400-1500
A.D. 1250–1400
A.D. 1150–1250
A.D. 1000–1150*
A.D. <1000
Apalachee
Lake Jackson III
Late Lake Jackson II
Early Lake Jackson II
Lake Jackson I
Unoccupied
*Scarry (1984) places the earliest occupation beginning around A.D.1100 based on the one
radiocarbon date from that period. The revision by Payne is based on ceramic seriation and not new radiometric data.
Source: Payne (1994:261)
47
dated the Fort Walton occupation. Most researchers now agree that Lake Jackson was
founded suddenly after the beginning of the Fort Walton culture.
Figure 4-2: Map showing location of farmsteads and mound centers in the Lake Jackson polity
(Sourse Brose & Percy 1978:101)
The environs of the Lake Jackson site also show a pattern that is not found in
other Fort Walton sites. The area has a continuous and regular scatter of small
farmsteads that surround single mound centers (see Fig 4-2). Major mound complexes
are found next to lakes and are associated with large villages. This implies that planning
and organization occurred before people migrated to the region (Brose and Percy 1978).
In the model developed by Peebles & Kus (1977), this move and infrastructure planning
48
is indicative of Mississippian chiefdoms. Moving eastward from the original Fort Walton
cultural area placed Lake Jackson in a direct trade relationship with Etowah.
History of Excavations
Formal excavations at Lake Jackson have occurred primarily in the village areas
and have avoided the mounds themselves. The first excavator at Lake Jackson was
Gordon R. Willey who dug two 3 m by 3 m test pits on the north and south side of
Mound 2 as part of a large scale survey project by the National Parks Service. Both pits
produced a large number of potsherds, though Willey does not list any other artifacts that
were found (Willey & Woodbury 1942).
Extensive excavations at the Lake Jackson site were performed in 1947 by John
W. Griffin for the Florida Parks Service. The excavations focused on the village area
north and west of Mound 2 (see Fig 4-3) with the goal of ascertaining the size and nature
of the Lake Jackson site. Although Griffin avoided excavating the mounds themselves,
he cleared a profile from a looter’s trench that had been dug into the top two meters on
the south side of Mound 2. His excavation showed that the mound was built in multiple
distinct stages using various colors of soil. Griffin also cleared the summit of Mound 4 in
order to identify whether buildings had
been placed upon it. After clearing the
summit, he found an extremely hard
packed red clay mantle with seven
possible post hole in it. He was not
able to determine the shape of the
structure and was not willing to Figure 4-3: This map shows the locations of Griffins
excavations in 1947 (source Griffin 1950:100).
49
excavate deeper due to the hardness of the clay (1950:101).
The only major mound excavation at the Lake Jackson site was performed on
Mound 3 by B. Calvin Jones from 1975 to 1976 (Jones 1982). At the time, Mound 3 was
on private property owned by Mr. Sam Crowder, who had tried for years to sell the
mound to the state of Florida as an extension of Lake Jackson State park. However, after
nearly twenty years, Mr. Crowder had decided to remove the mound in order to expand
his machine shop. Dr. Jones was made aware of the destruction of the mound when a
new homeowner brought him a copper axe head that he had found in his front yard.
Although Florida had no laws to preserve Native American burials on private land, Mr.
Crowder allowed Dr. Jones and two associates to excavate the mound, provided they did
so quickly (Jones 1982:7).
When the excavations began, an estimated forty percent of the mound had already
been removed and sold as fill dirt (Jones 1991, 1994). Rather than using a grid pattern to
excavate from the top of the mound downward, Jones decided to begin with the exposed
profile of the wall and move laterally from east to west. He used a back hoe to shave the
profile a few inches at a time. Jones and his excavators paid close attention to the wall
profile in order to identify burials. When a burial area was identified, scraping was
stopped, and a square excavation unit was begun from the top of the mound to maintain
accurate archaeological provenance (Jones 1982, 1991, 1994). Though Jones laments the
data lost during the quick excavation, he identified and excavated 15 distinct burials. In
his analysis, he also was able to synthesize data from 7 other burials excavated by an
avocational archaeologist named Conrad Kidd. I will be using Jones’s notation style;
burial numbers with the suffix ―K‖ denote burials excavated by Mr. Kidd. Those
50
excavated by Jones and his colleagues are numbered sequentially in the order they were
located.
Mound 3 and Its Burials
Mound 3 construction began during the Late Lake Jackson II phase (ca. A.D.
1250). Overall, the mound had a total of 12 floors. They are numbered from the most
recent temporally to the most ancient. The mound was constructed directly atop a
midden pit filled with burned organic refuse and a cache of 35 worked stone projectile
points. This pit was then capped with a yellowish-red clay layer and labeled as floor 12
by Jones. On top of Floor 12, a copper headdress ornamentation belonging to the
Cemochechobee style was found (Jones 1982). The Floor 12 cap is not raised above
ground level, but multiple post holes were found around it (Jones 1994). Although no
distinct pattern of posts was identified due to the speed of the excavation, I believe it is an
indication of sacred space.
As previously mentioned, Jones separated the burial into an initial group of floors
8-12, a middle group of floors 2-7, and a final group in floor 1 (1982, 1991, 1994). He
based his separation on the apparent decrease in burial frequency in floors two through
seven. Floor 2 and 3 only produced one burial each, and there was a third burial found in
association with floors four through seven. Its exact location was lost due to the
continuing destruction of the mound by Mr. Crowder. Table 4-2 lists each floor, the depth
of the cap that tops it, and the number of associated burials. As the table shows, most of
the floors were capped by regular amounts of fill dirt. However, floor 11 and floor 2
were capped by an unusually large amount of fill. The cap above floor 11 reached 112
cm at its thickest, and the cap above floor 2 was 132 cm. Finally, post holes indicate that
51
each floor had a structure on it that was burned before the mound was recapped (Jones
1982).
All but one of the burials followed the same method of body preparation (Jones
1982). Burial 12 in floor 10 was a cremation that was not found with any artifacts. The
rest of the bodies appear to have been wrapped in cloth. Individuals that were buried
with copper plates had these plates placed over their torso or abdomen on top of the cloth
wrapping. The bodies were then wrapped in leather, followed by cane or reed matting.
Finally, they were placed into pits dug into the floor of the mound. The pits were topped
with split logs, most of which had evidence of a fire that was burned on top of them.
Burial 6 from floor 11 provides circumstantial evidence that these char spots could have
been a corn offering. The split logs that this burial were themselves topped with a large
mass of charred corn. While charring was located on many other graves, the burnt item
was not identified. Bundling sacred objects was a common practice throughout North
America. Broadening the research by Reilly and Guernsey (2006), I believe these bodies
were clearly being ceremonially bundled before being interred (see Chapter 2).
Table 4-2. Mound 3 Floor Depths
Floor
Number 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Top
Depth
(cm) 1.5 48 96 4 5 21 20 36 42 12 20 180 24
Burials 0 1 3 3 3 1* 1 1 9 0
Total
Height
(cm)
1.5 49 141 145 150 171 191 227 269 281 301 481 505
* This burial was somewhere between floors 4 and 7 but the exact association was lost due to mound
destruction.
Source: adapted from Jones (1991:6a)
52
The burials in Mound 3 at Lake Jackson contained a wide variety of artifacts (see
Appendix B). All burials but numbers 8 and 12 were interred with large amounts of shell
and pearl beads from necklaces bracelets and anklets. Burial number 12 was a cremation
burial, and burial 8 was mostly removed by Mr. Crowder prior to excavation. Copper
artifacts formed the majority of the high status goods in Mound 3 with 14 copper plates,
11 copper axes, and numerous copper headdress ornaments being recovered (Jones 1991,
1994; Scarry 2007). Stone artifacts were rare, although several celts—or stone axe
heads—were recovered. Other artifacts include local materials such as shell drinking
cups and pottery vessels. Non-local materials include mica, graphite pigment, red ocher,
and shaped stone discoidals.
The copper plates can be divided into three broad categories. The first category
consists of birdman representations, the second category has repoussé or cut-out hawks
on them, and the final style contains plain circular or ovate discs. The first birdman plate,
interred with burial 7 in floor 9 (see Fig 4-4), belongs to the Late Braden style. There is
little doubt that this style originated at Cahokia (Brown 2007a, 2007b). There are several
motifs that differentiate this representation of the birdman from the copper plates found at
Etowah. On his head he is bearing an ogee motif. Instead of the raptor beak common to
the birdman representations, the figure on this plate has a curled snout which is found on
certain gorgets from Missouri (Brain & Phillips 1996). There is another Birdman plate in
the Late Braden style, and a final plate that Jones (1982) dubbed the ―Elder Hawkman‖
that is done in a local style (see Fig 4-4).
53
Figure 4-4: These are two of the copper plates found at Lake Jackson. On the Left is a Late Braden
Style birdman with an ogee motif on his headdress. On the right is the locally produced “Elder
Hawkman” (source Jones 1982).
Shell gorgets were uncommon in the burials in Mound 3 with only three found.
They were found associated with Floor 1 in burial numbers 2K, 4K, and 5K. All three of
them are in the Spaghetti style, which had a core area in Eastern Tennesse, and date to the
54
Early Lamar phase, circa A.D. 1375-A.D. 1525 (Wheeler 2001; Hally 2007). Similar
gorgets have been found in central Alabama, at Etowah, GA, and eastwards into North
Carolina. Like many elite artifacts, these gorgets likely spread along elite interaction
networks (Hally 2007).
Division of Burials
As mentioned earlier, Jones (1982) initially divided the burials into early and late
stages. After reviewing the data, I believe that the three phases laid out by Jones (1991)
rely too heavily on the lack of burials in floors 4-7. His methodology would be sound if
he had identified all burials in the mound with certainty. However, by his own estimate,
almost half of the mound had been destroyed prior to his arrival. His research and
interviews with the landowner revealed at least two other burials had been removed and
could not be assigned to a level. Furthermore, the axe head found in the fill dirt from a
homeowner’s yard may have come from yet another unidentified burial. The recapping
of the mound in levels 4-7, without the introduction of a burial, does not fit the general
pattern of other known Mississippian capitals (Payne 1994). Although the Lake Jackson
site was occupied by a distinct culture, their burials seem to follow the broader patterns of
the SECC.
Based on my analysis of the data in Jones’ publications, I have created a slightly
different division of the burials. Using the stratigraphy recorded by Jones (1982), I
noticed that the recapping of each mound was fairly consistent with a new floor being
placed on average 42 cm above the previous floor (see Jones 1982, Table 1). However,
as mentioned previously, the caps above floors 11 and 2 were over a meter thick.
Excluding these two caps gives an average thickness of 26 cm for each of the ten
55
remaining floors. Rather than a recapping of the mound, I believe these two thick levels
indicate a ritual closure of the mounds beneath them. I realigned the three phases
postulated by Jones to coincide with these stratigraphic breaks. This realignment
immediately revealed patterns in the use and depositing of artifacts (see Appendix B).
Based on the types of artifacts found in each burial phase, I will refer to the phases as
Mound Establishment, Cult-Bringer, and Post-Etowah.
The Mound Establishment phase began around A.D. 1250 during the Late Lake
Jackson II phase (Payne 1994). This phase consists of floors 11 and 12, as well as the
pre-floor midden pit (see Fig 4-5). There is only one human burial, number 6, associated
Figure 4-5: This map shows the location of most of the 23 burials recovered from Mound 3 (source
Jones 1982:27).
56
with this phase. Floor 12 was placed over a midden pit filled with faunal and ceramic
remains that was capped with a thin clay cover. The creation of a ritual mound on top of
a feasting site has been noted at other SECC locations such as Etowah (Larson 1971).
Floor 11 was placed 40 cm above floor 12. The burial associated with this floor had pearl
necklaces, bracelets, and anklets but lacked any other burial furniture. However, the
body was prepared as a sacred bundle and an offering of burnt corn was placed on the
split logs that covered the tomb. Combined with the ritual offering of stone artifacts
under floor 12, I believe that this burial was part of the mound dedication.
The Cult-Bringer burial phase begins with floor 10 which was placed over more
than a meter of fill dirt. This phase consists of floors 2-10 and includes 12 known burials.
During this phase, evidence of long distance trade first appears in the burial record.
Burial 2 in floor 10 was interred with two spatulate celts similar to those found at Etowah
and pieces of mica which would have originated in the Appalachian Mountains. This
individual was also buried with several local artifacts including strands of pearl beads and
a Busycon shell drinking cup.
Based on the quantity of artifacts in each burial, long-distance trade seems to
increase throughout this stage. From floor 10 through floor 2, local goods tend to
diminish. Bracelets, necklaces, and anklets of solid pearl beads are replaced by strands of
mixed shell and pearl. No Busycon shell drinking cups were found after burial 2 in floor
10, and only one Busycon columnella pendant was found with Burial 16 in floors 4-7.
Non-local materials become increasingly more common as well. Several individuals
were interred with graphite pigment, mica, or red ochre. Burials in floors 10, 8, and 3
had stone celts. Floors 9, 8, 4-7, and 2 all have Birdman or Hawk repoussé copper plates.
57
The burials in the last two floors of this phase also had several copper headdress pendants
in the shape of key-sided maces or arrowheads. The final burial in this group, burial 10
from floor 2, included the Birdman plate that Jones dubbed the ―Elder Hawkman‖
(1982:17). After the Cult-bringer burial phase, no other explicit birdman imagery
appears in the burial record.
The final burial phase, which I have dubbed Post-Etowah, is very different from
the previous phases. Again this phase begins with a ritual burial of the previous mound
under 1.3 meters of fill. In the previous phases, no more than three burials were
identified for each floor. This last phase has nine burials. Copper goods become the
predominant type of burial artifact. All the burials except number 5K contained at least
one copper axe. Three of the burials had headdresses adorned with copper pendants.
Copper plates continued to be placed on the torso of the individuals, but their form
shifted from repoussée to copper cutouts of hawks. Plain copper discs that were circular
or ovate appear to replace the Birdman images. These plain copper discs were worn into
historic times by the Apalachee and other Native American groups in Florida. This post-
Etowah phase also sees the reemergence of local goods in burials. Several burials
contained Busycon shell drinking cups, ceramic bowls, and pipes. Non-local goods such
as mica continue to be interred with individuals in this final stage.
Analysis
The sudden appearance of the Lake Jackson site with organized urban and rural
locations indicates that the move into the area was made for a specific reason. My belief
is that the site was established over an existing trade corridor. Busycon shell was
imported from the Lake Jackson area to the Mississippian polities that existed in the
58
central portion of the eastern United States. By rapidly establishing a large chiefdom
capital, the elites of Lake Jackson could ensure their participation in a Prestige Goods
Trade Network.
With the rise of the Etowah polity around 1250 A.D. in northern Georgia, the
trade routes to the interior bottlenecked. The elites at Lake Jackson were forced to rely
on goods flowing from Etowah in order to establish and display ritual power. All of the
goods found in the Cult-Bringer burial phase are identical to those found at Etowah.
Some researchers believe that the celts at the Etowah and Lake Jackson sites were made
in the same workshop (Jones 1994; Scarry 2007). At the same time that these ritual
goods were passing between Etowah and Lake Jackson, esoteric knowledge was also
being exchanged. The copper plates associated with the Cult-Bringer mythology arrived
shortly after the establishment of Mound 3. Upon the arrival of the cult-bringer, the
artifact assemblage indicates that the elites at Lake Jackson completely abandoned
marine goods (with the exception of shell beads) for non-local goods. The cult-bringer
mythology was likely adapted into the existing belief system of the ruling class at Lake
Jackson.
My research has shown that Mound 3 likely functioned as a cosmological model
for the establishment of the Cult-Bringer ideology at Lake Jackson. As the myth states
(see Chapter 2), the Cult-Bringer appeared in the form of a human individual who had to
die to activate the cult (Waring 1977). Burial 2 in floor 10 contains an elite individual
who was interred with a shark’s tooth knife and several shark teeth sewn on his mantle.
He had two spatulate celts that are nearly identical to those found at Etowah. Although
this individual is not buried with any copper plates, he or she immediately precedes the
59
copper plate burials and may have played a role in the foundation of the cult at Lake
Jackson.
After the establishment of the Cult-Bringer ideology, the elites at Lake Jackson
continued to symbolize the cult with the sacred copper plates. Repoussé copper plates
were found associated with individuals up to floor 2. It is possible that the death of the
bearer of the copper plate caused a new cap to be placed over the mound, although the
existence of only one burial in floors 4-7 poses similar problems to Jones’ conclusions. I
believe that only one individual per generation controlled the use of the copper plates
because none of the burials intruded upon one another (Jones 1991, 1994). The position
of previous burials was remembered or recorded preventing intrusion on more ancient
burials.
Toward the end of the Cult-Bringer burial phase, imported repoussé plates are
replaced by local reproductions. The only locally made Birdman plate shows distinctive
differences from the Late Braden style plates discussed previously (see Fig 4-4). The
Elder Hawkman is frontal facing rather than in profile. He lacks many of the distinctive
avatar markers that usually identify the birdman including the bi-lobed arrow, the beaded
forelock, or the curled snout.
Based on the chronology suggested by the one radiometric date recovered from
floor 1 in Mound 3, the last level seems to occur toward the close of the 14th century at
the earliest (Jones 1982; Scarry 1984; Payne 1994). This corresponds with the demise of
the Wilbanks phase Etowah polity in A.D. 1375 (King 2007). The fall of Etowah clearly
allowed the elites at Lake Jackson to expand their prestige goods network further into
eastern Tennessee. Although sociotechnic axes become the primary form of ritual regalia
60
found in elite burials, the Lake Jackson site has no other known indicators of warfare. No
wall has been found surrounding the site, and the method of burial preparation seems
constant. Scarry (1984) and Payne (1994) indicate that Lake Jackson was continuously
occupied until historic times when it was the capital of the Apalachee chiefdom.
The three gorgets found in the final burials of Mound 3 are in the spaghetti style
that displays anthropomorphic beings either singly or in pairs. These beings have been
linked to the hero-twin mythologies that occur in the SECC (Wheeler 2001; Scarry 2007).
Data is currently too sparse to draw conclusions from this subtle shift in burial practices
(Binford 1971; Brown 1981). However, the introduction of gorgets, the shift to
sociotechnic axes, and the change in mortuary practices may indicate the introduction of
a new kin group at Lake Jackson, but further research is necessary to secure this
hypothesis.
Conclusion
The Lake Jackson site near Tallahassee Florida arose suddenly circa A.D. 1100 as
a well planned ceremonial center and village. Many researchers have already established
Lake Jackson’s participation in a prestige goods network that flowed first through
Etowah, Georgia, and then throughout the area of the SECC. By realigning the burial
phases in Mound 3 to correspond with stratigraphic changes in the mounds, an
iconographic pattern appears in the artifacts that confirms strong ties to Etowah. The
burial phases also indicate that long distance trade through Lake Jackson was limited to
the Etowah polity, and the elites at Lake Jackson gradually aligned their ideology to
match that of their trading partner. With Etowah’s demise, the cult-bringer ideology
61
vanishes and seems to be superseded by an ideology centered on ceremonial copper axes
and the hero twins.
Unlike Etowah, the Lake Jackson site is one of the least understood ceremonial
centers in the southeast. Although I have based my conclusions upon solid research,
there remain more unexplored questions than there are answers. Currently, Mound 3 is
assumed to be an elite burial mound based on similarities to all other Mississippian sites,
but no village burials have been excavated to confirm that the Mound 3 assemblage is
distinct from the burials of non-elites (Brown 1981). Furthermore, like Jones (1982,
1991), my conclusions are based upon a painfully small assemblage of artifacts. While
the patterns I have identified seem clear, they may be more indicative of a lack of
information than an ideological burial agenda. Hopefully, with more remote sensing and
excavations, the ties between Etowah and Lake Jackson can be fully clarified.
62
Chapter 5: Comparisons and Conclusions
Throughout my analyses of the sites of Etowah and Lake Jackson, I have alluded
to the trade of prestige goods. In order to better clarify how that relationship functioned
as it is represented in the elite mortuaries, I intend to conclude this paper with a
discussion of the similarities and differences between the Etowah and Lake Jackson
polities. I will focus on similarities and differences in the expression of the Southeastern
Ceremonial Complex at the different sites. I will discuss the display of elite power
through burials and ritual regalia, the choice of material goods, and the effect of the
prestige goods trade on the continuity of each site.
The primary similarity between the Etowah and Lake Jackson sites relies on their
overlapping time frames. In Table 5-1, I have created a side by side comparison of the
chronology of each site. The Etowah site had been previously occupied but had been
abandoned prior to the Early Wilbanks phase (King 2007). Table 5-1 shows that the
mound building phase at Etowah began suddenly and likely indicates the arrival of a new
63
elite class. Lake Jackson was established in a previously unoccupied location about one
hundred and fifty years before Etowah, according to Claudine Payne (1994). However,
Payne says that construction began on Mound 3 roughly the same time that construction
began at Etowah. The Wilbanks Phase Etowah polity was destroyed circa AD 1375 and
Mound C ceased to be used after this date. On the other hand, the use of Mound 3
persisted at Lake Jackson although a change in elite artifacts occurs circa AD 1400.
John Scarry (2007) has listed several of the similarities and distinctions in the
ritual goods from Etowah and Lake Jackson. He writes that both sites shared use of
copper plates with Birdman imagery as prestige goods, although the plates from the two
sites have several iconographic differences. The regalia worn by the elites at both sites
consisted of distinctive feather crowns adorned with copper ornaments. Scarry notes that
the key-sided mace ornaments from Lake Jackson burial K9 are nearly identical to those
from Moorehead’s burial 6a at Etowah. All the elite individuals buried at either site were
adorned with necklaces, bracelets, and anklets made from shell and pearl beads.
Table 5-1. Site and Mound Chronology for Etowah and Lake Jackson
A.D. 1000 1050 1100 1150 1200 1250 1300 1350 1400 1450 1500
Etowah Early Etowah Late Etowah Unocc. Early
Wilbanks
Late
Wilbanks Unoccupied
Brew-
ster
Mound C Mound C in Use
Lake Jackson
Lake Jackson I Early Lake Jackson II
Late Lake Jackson II Lake Jackson III
Mound 3 Mound 3 in Use
64
Scarry (2007) cites several distinctions between the Etowah and Lake Jackson
cultures that he attributes to the larger artifact assemblage found at Etowah. Several
elites at Etowah were buried with chipped flint swords or maces that are also represented
on several Hightower style shell gorgets. With the exception of the burial cache below
floor 12, no worked flint was reported in the Lake Jackson assemblage. The elite
paraphernalia worn at the two sites had subtle differences. Several elites at Etowah were
buried with bi-lobed arrow ornaments as part of their headdresses. While the birdman
representations from the Lake Jackson repoussée plates are depicted with bi-lobed arrows,
none of these seem to have been reproduced as regalia at that site.
Scarry (2007) concludes his article by comparing mortuary practices. He focuses
primarily on the distinctions in burial frequency. He says that Mound C at Etowah
contained over 250 burials while Mound 3 at Lake Jackson held only 24. He further
writes that all the burials at Lake Jackson were single individuals placed in isolated
graves. While a few of the burials at Etowah contained multiple individuals, many of the
individual burials seemed to be organized into groups. A possible hypothesis is that
Mound C contains elites and their kin while Mound 3 was only available to a single
chiefly line (King 2004; Scarry 2007). Although no isotope sourcing tests have been
performed on the individuals from either site, this seems to be a logical conclusion. A
simple ratio of the number of individuals buried per year shows an average of 4 burials
per year at Etowah to 1 burial every 10 years at Lake Jackson.
My own research offers some additional comparisons to those noted by Scarry
(2007). The burials at Lake Jackson seemed to have been wrapped as sacred bundles
before they were interred. There is no definitive evidence of the elites at Etowah being
65
wrapped as sacred bundles. However, this may be due to the differences in excavation
techniques that developed between Larson’s 1950 excavation at Etowah and Jones’s 1975
excavation at Lake Jackson. It may be possible to view the stone and wood lined burial
chambers in Mound C as sacred bundles (Reilly, personal communication, March 2007).
The use and display of ritual regalia was different at Etowah and Lake Jackson.
The copper plates found at either site were placed in different locations in the burials.
The Rogan plates from Etowah were found above the individuals’ heads, imitating the
regalia seen on the birdman representations (Reilly 2007). The copper plates at Lake
Jackson were placed on the torsos of the buried individuals as part of the burial wrapping.
Similarly, those individuals at Etowah who were buried with feather crowns had them
placed immediately above their heads (Larson 1959), while the few crowns found at Lake
Jackson were up to 75 cm above the individual (Jones 1982). While more research is
necessary to clarify the meaning behind regalia usage, these general observations support
distinctive views of regalia at Lake Jackson and Etowah.
Sociotechnic weaponry frequently appears at both Etowah and Lake Jackson
(Scarry 2007). Based on my research, the sociotechnic weapons that appear at Etowah
occur for two reasons. The first is a need for the elites to firmly establish their ritual
authority in battle during a time of increasing warfare. My research also suggests that
there was a decline in shell use at Etowah that was linked to the increase of warfare and
raids. If shell became scarce the Etowah elites could have made a pragmatic shift in
regalia. On the other hand, sociotechnic weapons are not consistently represented at
Lake Jackson during the same time period (AD 1250-1375). A few early burials in the
Cult-Bringer phase contained stone celts, similar to those from Etowah; however, Lake
66
Jackson lacks monolithic stone axes and worked chert ―swords‖. Sociotechnic copper
axes appear at Lake Jackson after the demise of Etowah, circa AD 1400. Unlike Etowah,
there is no corroborating evidence for warfare motivating this ideological shift.
Lake Jackson appeared to trade solely with Etowah for most of the time that
Mound 3 was in use. Elites from both sites favored non-local materials for their regalia.
The Early Wilbanks phase elites at Etowah preferred to use locally produced shell
gorgets made on imported Busycon shell. These gorgets were inscribed with images of
the birdman or cosmological models. The elites at Lake Jackson relied on the use of
copper plates and ornaments to display elite power. Some of these plates were imported
in a finished form, while others were locally produced.
Imported copper and mica dominate the artifacts from the floor 1 burials, which
were constructed after the fall of the Etowah chiefdom. The increased presence of non-
local goods supports the hypothesis that the Etowah elites were forcibly monopolizing the
long distance trade routes in which Lake Jackson participated. After Etowah fell, I
believe the Lake Jackson polity was able to expand their elite goods trade networks
deeper into the Appalachians and Tennessee. They gained greater access to raw copper
from which they fashioned their sociotechnic axes. During the final burial phase at Lake
Jackson, shell gorgets from Tennessee also appear for the first time. It is possible that
these gorgets represent the introduction of a new kin group or ideology to Lake Jackson
at this time. However, more research is necessary to test this hypothesis during the Lake
Jackson III phase (AD 1400-1500).
Conclusion
67
My research into the burial assemblages of Mound C at Etowah, Georgia and
Mound 3 at Lake Jackson, Florida has focused on the change in ritual regalia over time.
At both sites, I looked at previous research into the use of regalia. I then focused on the
trade networks that were shared between the two sites and how the selection of non-local
materials for use as elite regalia was affected by trade.
At Etowah, I used a chronology developed by Adam King (2007) to chart the
artifacts listed in the Brain & Phillips (1996) catalogue. My research showed that
Etowah experienced a clear shift from shell gorget usage with ritual imagery to using
sociotechnic weapons to display and maintain elite power. I was able to link this shift
temporally to the increase in warfare at the beginning of the Late Wilbanks phase (A.D.
1325) that had been established by other researchers.
The burial assemblages at Lake Jackson were reported and analyzed by B. Calvin
Jones (1982, 1991, 1994). His use of modern excavation techniques, combined with a
small number of burials, prevented the temporal confusion seen at Etowah. However, his
statistical separation of the mound into three phases, based upon burial frequency, relies
upon the assumption that he had recovered the majority of the burials in Mound 3. To
correct this, I used the two unusually thick stratigraphic levels in the mound to realign
these three phases postulated by Jones (1991). My method revealed a pattern in the
burial of repoussée copper plates that signified the introduction of the Cult-Bringer myth.
I found that my three realigned burial phases correlate to a mound establishment phase, a
foreign trade phase marked by the adoption of the Cult-Bringer ideology, and a Post-
Etowah phase.
68
After charting the burial goods temporally at both Etowah and Lake Jackson, I
used comparison between the two assemblages to clarify their relationship. As had
already been established, the two sites shared a long distance trade network of elite goods
(Scarry 2007). My research suggests that Lake Jackson was founded in order to
participate in the exchange of Busycon shell used for gorgets and drinking cups. With the
foundation of the Wilbanks phase Etowah paramouncy, this trade route was monopolized.
The control over trade led to the destruction of Etowah at the end of the Late Wilbanks
phase (AD 1375). This gave the elites at Lake Jackson the opportunity to expand trade
deeper into the SECC.
69
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74
Appendix A
Appendix A includes the charting of the artifacts and burials from Mound C at
Etowah, GA. All of the data included here were taken from Brain and Phillips (1996).
All interpretations are my own.
75
Bur
ial #
*,
**
Mal
e/Fem
ale
(You
ng) A
dult/
Chi
ldShell
Gor
get
Cop
per G
orge
t
Col
umne
lla P
enda
nt
Shell
Cup
s/Bow
lsShell
Bea
dsH
eadr
ess
Cop
per M
ace Pen
dant
Cu
Arrow
Pen
dantC
u Plu
mes
Cu
Bi-L
obed
Arrow
Pen
dant
sCu
Coi
lCu
Plate
s
Cu
Cov
ered
Ear
Spo
olsC
u A
xesSto
ne A
xe
Cel
ts
Mon
olith
ic S
tone
Axe
s
Flint "
Swor
ds"
Mic
aSto
ne P
alet
te
aN
/AN
/AX
(2)
XX
X (
2)
bN
/AC
?X
cN
/AN
/AX
fN
/AN
/AX
XX
X?
gN
/AC
XX
M1
N/A
AX
X?
XX
M5
N/A
AX
?X
X
M6A
N/A
N/A
XX
XX
M12
N/A
CX
X?
M13
N/A
AX
X
M17
N/A
N/A
XX
M18
N/A
AX
?X
?
Sta
ge
1-3
M20
N/A
N/A
X
M20A
N/A
N/A
X
M22
N/A
N/A
X?
X
M23
N/A
N/A
X (
2?)
M35
N/A
N/A
XX
M37
N/A
AX
X
M44
N/A
N/A
X
M49
N/A
N/A
XX
XX
M50
N/A
N/A
X
M51
N/A
N/A
X
M76
N/A
AX
X
XX
(2)
X
M83
N/A
N/A
XX
XX
M86
N/A
N/A
X
M-K
9N
/AN
/AX
?X
XX
M-K
16
N/A
N/A
X?
85
MY
AX
XX
94
FA
XX
103
FA
X
135
MA
X
137
F (
2)
AX
X
139
FA
XX
76
Bur
ial #
*,
**
Mal
e/Fem
ale
(You
ng) A
dult/
Chi
ldShell
Gor
get
Cop
per G
orge
t
Col
umne
lla P
enda
nt
Shell
Cup
s/Bow
lsShell
Bea
dsH
eadr
ess
Cop
per M
ace Pen
dant
Cu
Arrow
Pen
dantC
u Plu
mes
Cu
Bi-L
obed
Arrow
Pen
dant
sCu
Coi
lCu
Plate
s
Cu
Cov
ered
Ear
Spo
olsC
u A
xesSto
ne A
xe
Cel
ts
Mon
olith
ic S
tone
Axe
s
Flint "
Swor
ds"
Mic
aSto
ne P
alet
te
143
FA
XX
148
F?
AX
X (
2)
XX
151
N/A
CX
XX
179
MA
XX
X
201
MA
X (
2)
XX
X
Sta
ge
1-3
204
FA
XX
(2)
207
MA
XX
210
FA
X (
2)
XX
216
FY
AX
X
223
FY
AX
X
227
N/A
CX
X
Sta
ge
457
MA
XX
(8)
XX
X (
6)
XX
(2)
47
FA
X
Sta
ge
5c
38
N/A
A (
4)
XX
(4)
X (
10)
X (
8)
X (
Cu)
X
19
MA
XX
20
MA
XX
XX
(2)
XX
25
N/A
AX
X (
2)
XX
X
X
27
FA
XX
28
N/A
AX
XX
X (
key
)X
(2)
X
30
N/A
AX
XX
31
N/A
AX
X (
2)
42
MA
XX
44
N/A
AX
(2)
XX
Sta
ges
5-7
45
N/A
AX
(3)
X (
4)
X
46
N/A
AX
48
MA
N/A
CX
XX
(2)
49
MA
N/A
YA
XX
(4)
50
MA
XX
XX
51
N/A
N/A
XX
52
N/A
N/A
XX
X
77
Bur
ial #
*,
**
Mal
e/Fem
ale
(You
ng) A
dult/
Chi
ldShell
Gor
get
Cop
per G
orge
t
Col
umne
lla P
enda
nt
Shell
Cup
s/Bow
lsShell
Bea
dsH
eadr
ess
Cop
per M
ace Pen
dant
Cu
Arrow
Pen
dantC
u Plu
mes
Cu
Bi-L
obed
Arrow
Pen
dant
sCu
Coi
lCu
Plate
s
Cu
Cov
ered
Ear
Spo
olsC
u A
xesSto
ne A
xe
Cel
ts
Mon
olith
ic S
tone
Axe
s
Flint "
Swor
ds"
Mic
aSto
ne P
alet
te
53
N/A
N/A
X
54
FA
X
55
MY
AX
58
N/A
N/A
X
59
N/A
N/A
X
60
MA
XX
(2)
X
61
N/A
N/A
X
64
N/A
CX
X
66
F?
AX
Sta
ges
5-7
67
MA
X (
4)
X (
2)
XX
(2)
XX
XX
XX
(2)
74
MA
XX
XX
X
75
N/A
A (
2)
XX
X (
3)
X
76
N/A
N/A
X
77
MA
XX
109
MA
(2)
X?
XX
XX
X (
key
)X
X (
2)
X (
2)
XX
XX
X (
2)
X
111
MA
XX
X (
2)
XX
X (
2)
X
Sta
ge
715
N/A
A (
4)
XX
XX
?X
XX
1N
/AA
(4)
X?
XX
X
78
Appendix B
Appendix B includes the charted data from Mound 3 at Lake Jackson,
FL. All the data in this chart were compiled from the publications of B.
Calvin Jones (1982, 1991). All data entry and interpretations are my own.
79
Flo
or
Buri
al #
Sex
Buri
al
Typ
e
CU
Axe
Celt
Spatu
late
Celt
Shark
Knife
CU
Headdre
ss
Cu
Bre
ast
pla
teP
in
Shell
Gorg
et
Shell
Penda
nt
Shell/
Pearl
Beads
Shell
Cup
Vess
el
Pip
eD
isco
idal
CU
Pla
tes
Sto
ne
Pale
tte
Mis
c.
12
N/A
11
6S
plit
Logs
X (
p)
Covere
d w
ith
mass
of
charr
ed c
orn
10
2S
plil
t Log
X (
2)
XX
(p)
XX
Shark
teeth
beads,
Mic
a
8I
X
12
Cre
mation
97
Split
Log
X (
ogee B
M)
X (
s/p)
Gra
phite
Pig
ment
11
X (
s)C
loak/
Mantle
15
85
IX
(2)
leath
er?
13
X (
Rep H
aw
k)X
(s/
p)
cloth
, le
ath
er
14
X (
s)
4-7
16
Cane/
Split
Log
X (
Hdance
r)X
X (
p)
X (
Cncv
)
leath
er?
,
colu
mnella
pendant?
39K
IX
X (
11 k
ey)
X (
s/p)
Feath
ers
210
Cane/
Split
Log
X?
X (
2),
(E
lder,
Haw
k)X
X (
s/p)
Sack
14
IC
ane
XX
(s)
X (
Cncv
)C
loth
3X
X (
3)
X (
2)
X (
s/p)
XX
(F
lat)
Polis
hed
gra
vel, M
ica
1
Cane/
Split
Log
X (
2)
X (
2)
X (
Rep H
aw
k)X
(s)
X (
Lm
st)
X (
2)
XC
loth
6K
IC
ane
XX
X (
s)X
Leath
er
5K
XX
(s)
X (
ptr
y)
4K
XX
(P
lain
oval)
XX
(s/
p)
XX
(2)
3K
IX
X (
arr
ow
, O
)X
(s/
p)
X
2K
Split
Log
XX
(arw
, ft
h,
O)
X (
6)
(1 o
val,
5 f
alc
on)
XX
X (
s/p)
X
1K
IS
plit
Cn
XX
(arr
ow
, O
)X
(P
lain
Oval)
XX
(s/
p)
Clo
th,
Mic
a
cach
e o
f ch
ert
arr
ow
heads
Pre
-mound m
idden w
/ bro
ken c
era
mic
s,
charc
oal and f
aunal re
main
s
Regalia
Soci
ote
chnic
Weapons
Buri
al F
urn
iture
Cem
och
eco
bee C
U
arr
ow
head